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ENLACE likes new accountability system
The state's new approach to helping the state's most struggling schools is getting a thumbs up from ENLACE Florida, a group seeking to increase educational opportunities for Latinos and other under-represented students.
The new approach, which blends the state accountability system with the federal system mandated by No Child Left Behind, "could make Florida a national leader in efforts to evaluate and improve school performance," ENLACE wrote in a policy research brief
released today.
The brief takes a closer look at the 13 schools that the state says need the most help under the new system, including Middleton High, Franklin Middle Magnet and Sulphur Springs Elementary in Hillsborough. The brief contains a barrage of depressing statistics about each school, including the percentage of newly hired (and probably less effective) teachers that are brought on board every year.
Click here for a recent St. Petersburg Times story on the woes at Middleton.
- Ron Matus, state education reporter
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Gradebook features education articles and insights on schools in Florida, focusing on Tampa Bay area schools. What's the latest from the Florida Department of Education? How is the FCAT being used to compare Florida schools? What's going in on in Tampa Bay schools? Get an insider's view from the Times education reporting team.
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THE TEAM
| Rebecca Catalanello covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail her: rcatalanello@tampabay.com. |
| Tony Marrero covers Hernando County schools. E-mail him: tmarrero@tampabay.com. |
| Marlene Sokol covers Hillsborough County schools. E-mail her: sokol@tampabay.com. |
| Ron Matus covers Pinellas County schools. E-mail him: matus@tampabay.com. |
| Jeffrey S. Solochek covers Pasco County schools. E-mail him: solochek@tampabay.com. |
| Kim Wilmath covers the University of South Florida. E-mail her: kwilmath@tampabay.com. |
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